Threads from Henry's Web

Tag: arrogance

  • Psalm 119:75 – Humiliated

    Psalm 119:75 – Humiliated

    I know, LORD that your judgments are righteous.
    It’s in truthfulness you have humiliated me.

    If I were making a translation for publication, there would be a footnote on “truthfulness” that would include “faithfulness,” “honesty,” and “trustworthiness” as a minimum. It’s important not to imagine that a Hebrew word brings all of its applications into each use. The Amplified Bible does this by giving many synonyms in a single verse.

    But in poetry, we can see a less limited way of reading, because the text is intended to be brief and to evoke a range of related ideas.

    I’m leaving “righteous judgments” for another day. But righteous judgments are also truthful judgments. In much of what I’ve read of court cases, I get the feeling that the judgments rendered by human judges are often constrained by current custom, and less so by written law or by principles of justice. I would say that the idea of divine justice involves an expectation of total truthfulness and faithfulness as well as adherence to statutes of law. This is an unreachable goal for humans, I think, though it is a good goal for which to strive.

    I couldn’t think of an efficient way to say it, but the final words of this verse suggest that we are brought humiliation by truthfulness/faithfulness. One might say “integrity.” God simply brings truth to bear on our actions, and it’s humiliating.

    It’s in our human nature to get upset at this. We don’t want to be humiliated. But how often does reality do that to us? We think we’re great, and then reality strikes and something goes wrong. We announce that we can handle a situation, make a repair, or pass a test. Then reality comes to get us.

    Most spiritual things have everyday analogies. Spiritually, we decide to do things a certain way, accomplish certain goals, spent certain amounts of time in prayer or service, keep our motivations pure, avoid unjust anger. And then we get busy and we don’t get that time in prayer, we don’t read out Bible as we planned, and we find we have less time and resources to serve others as we had determined.

    I can give an example from this series. On the one hand, I’m happy to be 75 verses (and days) into a 176 verse plan. But I can’t count the number of times I’ve actually forgotten which verse I was working on during the day. I’ve sat back, intending to bring the verse to mind, and I can’t remember it. I’m supposed to be meditating on it. That’s a minor failure, but it’s still a failure, and it annoys me that I do it.

    I wish I could say that my faults are generally small, like forgetting a verse. I can always look it up again. But when I speak hurtful words in anger, for example, the problem is not so easy to repair.

    So what shall I do? To echo Paul, “Who will rescue me?”

    Well, actually, the same God who provides the truth that puts me in my place over and over. The same God the psalmist has been praising for these 75 verses and will continue to praise for another 101. This help comes in three ways:

    1. This God claims me as his own and allows me to call him mine. See Psalm 119:57 – Still Mine!
    2. I can learn to know my own limitations. It may be humiliating to come up against the truth, but if I’m not arrogant, it’s not going to hurt as much!
    3. The same God also provided this law, this distant goal, that helps keep me pointed in the right direction.

    Coming up against the real standard is good for us in all these ways. We tend to want to pretend that the standard is lower so we can feel better. We’d like God to protect us from the results of our own stupidity and failures. But those options results in a lack of growth. God wants to grow you up. To take the next step. And the next.

    What next step does God want you to take today?

    (Featured image generated by Jetpack AI.)

    Some books:

  • Psalm 119:21 – Pride and Staggering

    Psalm 119:21 – Pride and Staggering

    You rebuke the proud, accursed ones,
    Who stagger away from your commands.

    As with each verses, there are lots of directions my mind goes with this, for example, what it means to be “accursed” and what, in particular, one might be proud of.

    But the direction my mind went was simply this: Pride goes before destruction (Proverbs 16:18). How is that?

    Now first let me distinguish pride from pride. That is, there is a good feeling at doing something right, or even more at seeing someone else do something well. I’m frequently proud when I hear or read about what my grandchildren have done.

    The difference between one kind or another is not one of degree, but one of truth. A pride in knowledge that is simply accurate acknowledgment of one’s accomplishments can be a positive part of living and growth. But there is a different quality of inaccurate pride, which can also be called arrogance–the assumption that one knows things and has skills when one does not, in fact have that knowledge or capability.

    I’ve certainly experience the latter form of pride when I assumed I had something covered, and then encountered a test that proved I had no such knowledge. As I read 1 Corinthians, I see a whole book directed at forms of spiritual pride. It’s not doing good things, or even knowing you’ve done good things that’s condemned, but rather the thought that you are better than other people when you do those things.

    It’s not wrong to believe you have gifts from God. It’s wrong to believe your gifts make you better than other people.

    Pride often results from not looking at the standard. If I take my eyes off of God’s standards (his law or instruction) as is noted in this Psalm, then I can decide that I have attained when I have not.

    An overestimate of my own accomplishments or capabilities can also make me attempt things for which I am not actually qualified. My wife and I have had a number of discussions over the years about continuing to drive after a certain point as we get older. We know many stories of people who thought, “I can still do this. I’m good!” It turned out, they were not so good. Pride in skill as a driver when one’s eyesight or attention has deteriorated has frequently resulted in injury or death, and not just of the proud one.

    To again distinguish pride, let me say I’m proud of my parents (first sense), who each made a decision not to continue driving after a certain point. They decided they were no longer capable of handling their vehicle safely on the road. They sold it, and used other means of transportation.

    Psalm 119 points us repeatedly to God’s standards as something to study, even as a mirror to look at. If we imagine ourselves better than we are, we’ve fallen into pride and arrogance and we’re going to stagger off the way.

    But as we look at that law, we know we serve one to whom we can also say, “Don’t let me wander!” (Psalm 119:8).

    Are you assessing yourself by looking at the right standard?